One example of personification in "The House on Mango Street" is when Esperanza describes the four skinny trees as “unclenched fists” reaching for the sky.
The author of "Four Skinny Trees" is Sandra Cisneros. In the story the narrator personifies trees to represent herself. The narrator describes the trees as if she was describing herself. In the story she describes the trees as four skinny trees that have skinny elbows like her. The narrator can see the trees from outside her bedroom window that she shares with her sister, who does not care about the trees, in the city. The narrator uses the word "keep" in the story to mean survive. By the end of the story the narrator feels reassured.
Esperanza identified with the four skinny trees because she felt a connection to their struggle for survival in a harsh environment. The trees mirrored Esperanza's own feelings of being trapped and struggling to grow in a challenging neighborhood. She saw herself in the trees, feeling small and vulnerable yet determined to thrive despite the odds against them.
This means that like the tree the child is a tiny being against a large world that he does not understand.
Bob was very poetic in the sense of reciting two haiku, four similes, and a personification in under twelve seconds.
The sentence is an example of personification, where the corpses are described as keeping mournful company despite being lifeless.
no trees do not have four corners
The Four Trees was created on 2007-04-10.
Four
You need to specify what four trees you are asking about
The four sentence moods are as follows:DeclarativeExclamatoryImperativeInterrogative
getting thin takes time. it can't be done in four days.
Scuba diving, skinny dipping, rafting and AIDs.